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Trump, Clinton still leading in new SC polls

“Will it happen? The answer depends on when or if anti-Trump sentiment will coalesce to interrupt his march to the nomination”, he said.

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D’Alessandro said the campaign has also had to deal with the fact that Clinton has run in Iowa before, even if she lost badly in 2008. New Hampshire follows Iowa, nearly literally Sanders’ backyard. “Their investments are to try to prevent me from being the Democratic nominee because they know I have the toughest, most effective, comprehensive plan to rein in Wall Street”, she said.

This is quite a big jump as three weeks ago, Trump, 69, trailed Cruz by four points in this crucial state. He leads a crowded group with 24 percent, with the closest challenger being Texas Senator Ted Cruz (14 percent).

The real estate mogul’s controversial comments about Mexicans, Muslims and women are seen by his supporters as a welcome change from most candidates’ careful political correctness. Clinton had a 69 percent favorable to 22 percent unfavorable split, and O’Malley had a 53 percent to 18 percent split.

Democratic presidential candidate Sen.

“The only way that change takes place is when millions of people become engaged and stand up and say loudly and clearly, this government of ours belongs to all of us, not just the 1 percent”, said Sanders to cheers, the Globe Gazette reports.

“A vote for Bernie Sanders is therefore merely a vote for the Democratic primary season to continue rather than ending abruptly in the first week of February with (in effect) a Clinton coronation”.

While it’s unclear how the ad will play with undecided Iowans, Sanders supporters seem to agree with the campaign.

Clinton’s struggle with Iowa voters couldn’t have come at a worse time. Tom Harkin. Harkin got almost 75 percent of the delegates, while Clinton got around 3 percent. In the latest poll, Carson came in fourth with 5 percent. And many Iowa voters will go to several campaign visits before deciding who to support.

On the other side of the aisle, Trump remains the dominant frontrunner in New Hampshire, getting 31 percent support compared to 12 percent for Cruz, a margin largely unchanged from polling earlier this month.

Noting that he is “no moderate”, the Times criticizes Kasich for having “gone after public-sector unions, fought to limit abortion rights and opposed same-sex marriage” during his time as governor of Ohio. They have shown themselves more than willing to swing heavily toward either party’s primary in recent decades.

In response, Clinton’s press secretary called on authorities to be more transparent and release emails in question.

What this means for Sanders is that the more undeclared voters who choose to vote Democratic, the better for him, because he, like Bill Bradley, fares much worse with the registered Democrats who will make up the rest of the electorate.

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If Cruz and Clinton win the nominations, Clinton would win 38 percent of the vote against 25 percent for Cruz and Bloomberg at 10 percent. And by bringing up the Clinton scandals no other Republican would touch, Trump has neutralized Bill Clinton as a factor.

Hillary Clinton in Des Moines Iowa